In 1965 the company made a radical change in design of the Olympic that became the basis for many Epiphone thin line solid body guitars.

The body bore a large white pickguard with a large Epiphone lower-case ε in the middle of the pickguard.

The tailpiece was a Gibson Maestro vibrola with a white plastic handle, sometimes called the Walrus tooth arm.

Many of the Olympic models came with one Melody Maker style single coil pickup placed in front of the bridge. There were separate volume and tone controls. The input was mounted on top of the pickguard.

The 24.75” neck was topped with a rosewood fretboard that was topped with 22 frets. The headstock was the Epiphone Bat wing style with six-in-a-row Kluson Deluxe tuners. All hardware was chrome plated.

The Olympic was also produced in a twin pickup model. This had the same type of pickups with an output of 7.16k and separate tone and volume controls for each pickup. All were mounted directly on the pickguard along with a 3-way Gibson style switch and the input.

This guitar came in a variety of colors. The 1965 Inverness Green model pictured here is very rare.

A soft shell lined case was standard issue with this model. In 1965 this guitar sold for $189.50.

Although Fender never did have an Olympic model guitar, one of Fender’s more popular shades of paint is Olympic White. The finish did not hold up on older models.

As you can see from the pictures, the paint takes on a yellow hue due to the lacquer used and aging. Personally, I like it.

Henley is a relatively unknown guitar distributor. Their products are made Korea. They offered a bass guitar with the name Olympic.

This bass has two pickups that are very different. In the rear the pickup is a Musicman style, while the front pickup is similar to what you would find on a Fender Jazz bass. This instrument has active controls mounted on its body. These include a pickup selector, volume control and a control for low EQ as well as one for high EQ. All hardware is made of die-cast nickel. The neck has a satin finish and the rosewood fretboard is topped with with offset pearloid position markers.

Henley Guitars are run by the husband and wife team from the UK Andy and Denise Henley. They import our own ranges of guitars and sell direct. Due to low overheads and they can offer excellent prices. Denise has a background in importing, shipping and freight. She runs all the administration side of the business and packing and shipping.

Tacoma Papoose

Tacoma Guitars were an acquisition of the Fender Musical Instrument Company. I do not know if Fender has completely closed out the brand or just placed Tacoma on hiatus. Historically, Tacoma was a small Washington state based guitar manufacturer that came out with a very fine and interesting line of guitars. One of their most popular models was an acoustic travel guitar known as the Tacoma Papoose.

After becoming well known, Tacoma launched a budget Korean import model and put the logo Olympia on these models. Though the price point factor was their goal, since Olympia models sold at a considerably lower price than Tacoma guitars. Non-the-less, Olympics were fine instruments.

For instance, Olympia guitars model OD-18S came with a solid spruce top with a glossy finish, a 25.5” scale set neck made of mahogany, a rosewood fingerboard with 20 jumbo frets that had abalone position markers. The bridge was mad of rosewood and had a rather unique shape. The neck and body were bound. The rosette was made of abalone. The sides were made of solid rosewood, but the back was made of laminated rosewood.

Olympia guitars came in various models made of differing woods. They also offered mandolins and acoustic bass guitars. All Olympia instruments are designed and set up in the USA .

Finally, there is a manufacturer from Columbia, South Carolina called The Carolina Guitar Company. They offer a distortion pedal known as the Olympia Fuzz. The manufacturer stated they were inspired by the Bender fuzztone and the Big Muff Pi fuzz and named after the Hammer of the Gods. This little pedal has received great reviews.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

In the southern Spanish peninsula of Iberia is the autonomous community of Andalusia. The name traces back to the Arabic word, Al-Andalus. This part of Spain was settled by Muslims, Romani, Carthaginians, Greeks, Roman, Phoenicians, Iberians, Sephardic Jews and other diverse groups.

The art of lutherie or stringed instrument building has long been associated with Spain. The luthiers of Andalusia made instruments in a wide range of prices, largely based on the materials used, and the amount of decoration. The cheapest guitars were often simple, basic instruments made from the less expensive local woods such as cypress, rather than imported rosewood.

It was here that a style of playing known as Flamenco flourished. Flamenco is dance music. In addition to playing the strings, Flamenco guitar utilizes percussive tapping of the guitars body.

A friend once said, “Nothing really changes, everything remains the same.” In the beginning, most musicians were not getting rich, as is the case today. Most could only afford and inexpensive guitar. Which might be good for Flamenco music since the instruments have a very short life span due to all the tapping and slapping of the guitars body.

So less expensive woods were used on Flamenco guitars. The tops were generally made of cypress. Sycamore was used for the back and sides. On a really good instrument the maker used rosewood.

These were hard woods and produced an increase in volume and a brighter tone that could be heard over the dancers’ shoes that had nails in the soles. Flamenco guitars are lighter than Classical guitars.

Some come with a type of celluloid pickguard known as a golpeador that protects the guitars body from the tapping and striking.

The following short film is about the making of a Flamenco guitar. It is called The Making of Alma Flamenca, which roughly translates to Soul of Flamenco.

The film condenses into three minutes a job that took Lazarides 299 hours to complete. For those of you doing the math, if Lazarides spent 9 hours a day working on the guitar, it would have taken him a little over a month to complete, assuming he worked weekends.

I found the film fascinating, since you can see how the craftsman doesn’t just work with the wood, he listens to it, feels it and determines how much vibration will occur.

The film features the incredible playing of guitarist Edsart Udo De Haes.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

A good friend sent information to me about this amazing little device. I am surprised no one has come up with this idea until now. This is a portable, easy-to-use guitar pick punch.

Ions ago, when I first started playing guitar, I was forever losing picks. I'd buy a half dozen at the music store and a week later friends would borrow them or they magically disappeared from my guitar case.

Let's face it, guitar picks are small, usually fairly inexpensive and easily misplaced. They may fly out of your hand when you are on stage playing or fall into the soundhole of your acoustic guitar.

The Guitar Pick Punch is about the size of a 6" desk stapler, so it can easily fit into your gig bag or guitar case. It accepts a variety of materials as long as they are no more than 0.9mm thick. If you need a heavier pick, you can make two and glue them together.

Do you have an expired credit card? Turn it into a guitar pick. How about a store shopping card club that you no longer use? Turn it into a guitar pick. How about a used up gift card or some plastic packaging material that is relatively thick can be your guitar pick in an instant.